Cracker Simulation
Cracker Simulation
Abstract - Ethylene plant is one of the largest plants and the thermal cracking furnace is a key unit in the ethylene
plant. Since ethylene is the basic material in the chemical industry and the market situation of not only the feed and
the product, but also the utility is rapidly changing, the optimal operation of the plant is important. CRACKER, a
PC based software of thermal cracking furnaces is developed based on the rigorous first principles model which can
reflect the effects of the operating variables. CRACKER has a user-friendly graphic interface for the convenient use
and also provides a feed characterization module which can estimate the composition of conventional components
from the commercially available indices. By using CRACKER, the ethylene plant operators can understand the
furnace system well and easily diagnose the current operation and thus can make both the optimal operation
strategy according to the market and the optimal co-cracking strategy according to the characteristics of the
purchased naphtha. Also in the purchase of naphtha, the feed characterization module can help to determine the
better naphtha for the plant based on the price of the naphtha and products.
Keywords : naphtha thermal cracking furnace, PC based simulator, rigorous furnace model, feed characterization,
principal component analysis
INTRODUCTION
The heart of an ethylene plant with a huge economic
impact is a cracking furnace. The key factor of optimal
design and operation in the furnace is the precise
prediction of yields and furnace performance. Todays
tough environment of the ethylene market further
stresses the importance of a pertinent furnace model.
The cracking furnace consists of four major sections
which are closely related with each other: the
convection section, the cracking reactor, the radiant
box, and the transfer line exchange (TLE) section. For
finding an optimal operation strategy, it is crucial to
see the influence of operating parameters which can
only be satisfactorily calculated through the rigorous
modeling with the full integration of every essential
section. However, since the complex relations in heat
transfer between these sections hamper the
development of a fully integrated rigorous model,
many researches have been restricted to developing the
individual models for one of the furnace sections. But
the coil inlet temperature is not fixed by the plant
operator but determined by the operating conditions of
the radiant box and convection section.
There are spectrums of furnace models according to
the rigor or difficulty. Simple regression-type reactor
models were developed by ethylene plant licensors or
early researchers. But black-box models are not able to
estimate the plant operation to the changes of operating
variables, thus more rigorous models are required. Rao
et.al.(1988) and Plehiers et.al.(1990) simulated the
PROCESS DESCRIPTION
In the ethylene plant of a non-oil-producing country,
naphtha is the most widely-used feed material in
thermal cracking furnaces. Naphtha is a mixture of
complex hydrocarbon materials which ranges mostly
from C5 to C10 paraffins. Thermal cracking of naphtha
generates high ethane yield, which can be easily
converted to more valuable product, ethylene also by
thermal cracking. Therefore there usually exist two
types of furnaces.
In the radiant box, combustion of fuel gas and/or fuel
oil occurs to provide the heat to the cracking coil
reactors. The detail configuration of cracking reactors
varies depending on the licensor and the cracking feed
type. In the reactor, numerous cracking reactions
occur to produce ethylene and propylene. Against the
undesirable side reactions in the hot product stream,
the product stream from the reactor is quenched in the
TLE in which high pressure steam is generated. The
remaining heat from the radiant box is used for
preheating the feed, the boiler feed water, and the
steam in the convection section. A phase transition
occurs during preheating boiler feed water or liquid
naphtha feed. Figure 1 shows the simplified ethane
cracking furnace diagram. In the ethane cracking
furnace, there is a heat integrating element between hot
product stream after TLE and cold preheated feed
stream. But the naphtha cracking furnace has no
recycle element which exists in the ethane cracker.
C3H6
C2H4
0.18
0.35
0.16
0.30
0.14
0.12
weight fraction
weight fraction
0.25
0.20
0.15
0.10
0.10
0.08
0.06
0.04
0.05
0.02
0.00
0.00
10
15
20
25
30
10
15
20
25
30
1200
230
1150
220
1100
210
pressure (kPa)
temperature (K)
1050
1000
950
light naphtha
mid naphtha
heavy naphtha
200
190
180
900
170
850
0
10
15
20
25
30
160
0
10
15
20
25
30
CONCLUSIONS
CRACKER, a PC based thermal cracking furnace
simulator is developed based on the rigorous modeling
of the radiant box, convection section, cracking reactor,
Table 3. Simulation results for radiant box and
convection section
Operating variables
Simulation
Flame temperature
2271.79 K
Averaged gas temp.
1719.52 K
Averaged cracking tube skin temp. 1363.07 K
Bridge wall temperature
1498.61 K
Stack temperature
421.716 K
Thermal efficiency of furnace
36.77 %
feed preheating outlet temp.
432.68 K
BFW outlet vapor fraction
25.8 %
super heated steam out temp
844.01 K
Mixed feed inlet temp.
593.23 K
Cross over temp.
953.21 K
Acknowledgement
This work was partially supported by the Korea
Energy Management Corporation and the Yeungnam
University research grants in 1998.
REFERENCES
Chapman, A.J., "Heat Transfer", Macmillan, 4th ed.,
1984
Plehiers P.M., Reyniers G.C., and Froment, G.F.,
"Simulation of the Run length of an ethane cracking
furnace", Ind.Eng.Chem.Res., 29, 636, 1990
Rao M., Plehiers P.M., Froment G.F., "The coupled
simulation of heat transfer and reaction in a pyrolysis
furnace", Chem.Eng.Sci., 43(6), 1223, 1988
Song, TH, "WSGGM user's manual",KAIST,1996
Wagner, E.S., Hamid, O.A., Sohn, E.M., Preston, R.F.,
"PYROTEC's ethylene plant furnace modeling
technology coupled with ASPENTECH's real-time
optimization system provides off-line and on-line
benefits", ASPEN WORLD 97, 1997